Friday, February 8, 2013

Solving big-data bottleneck: Scientists team with business innovators to tackle research hurdles

Feb. 7, 2013 ? In a study that represents a potential cultural shift in how basic science research can be conducted, researchers from Harvard Medical School, Harvard Business School and London Business School have demonstrated that a crowdsourcing platform pioneered in the commercial sector can solve a complex biological problem more quickly than conventional approaches -- and at a fraction of the cost.

Partnering with TopCoder, a crowdsourcing platform with a global community of 450,000 algorithm specialists and software developers, researchers identified a program that can analyze vast amounts of data, in this case from the genes and gene mutations that build antibodies and T cell receptors. Since the immune system takes a limited number of genes and recombines them to fight a seemingly infinite number of invaders, predicting these genetic configurations has proven a massive challenge, with few good solutions.

The program identified through this crowdsourcing experiment succeeded with an unprecedented level of accuracy and remarkable speed.

"This is a proof-of-concept demonstration that we can bring people together not only from different schools and different disciplines, but from entirely different economic sectors, to solve problems that are bigger than one person, department or institution," said Eva Guinan, HMS associate professor of radiation oncology at Dana-Farber Cancer Institute and director of the Harvard Catalyst Linkages Program. "Given how complicated the immune system is, this has been a particularly formidable biological problem, and building tools for solving it has been hard and time-consuming. We were stunned by the power of these results and their potential application."

"This study makes us think about greater efficiencies in academic research can be obtained," said Karim Lakhani, associate professor in the Technology and Operations Management Unit at Harvard Business School. "In a traditional setting, a life scientist who needs large volumes of data analyzed will hire a postdoc to create a solution, and it could take well over a year. We're showing that in certain instances, existing platforms and communities might solve these problems better, cheaper and faster."

"We're excited to see that ideas from economics and management fields can be so productively applied to medical research," said Kevin Boudreau, assistant professor of strategy and entrepreneurship at London Business School. "This progress is heartening, particularly in view of the computational challenges we face in understanding so many diseases. We hope this provides a model of how social science and medical researchers can collaborate to solve real-world problems that matter to people."

These findings are reported Feb. 7 in Nature Biotechnology.

For several years Boudreau, Guinan and Lakhani -- through Harvard Catalyst -- have explored the potential applicability of open and distributed innovation approaches to new areas, such as medical research. This has involved bringing insights from social science and economics to processes of medical research. They teamed up with Ramy Arnaout, HMS assistant professor of pathology at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center. Arnaout is also a systems biologist whose laboratory studies immune sequencing and other so-called "big-data" problems in biomedicine. Arnaout had developed computational methods for analyzing immune repertoires, but he could foresee having to invest significant computer and personnel resources to keep those methods able to handle the ever-increasing influx of data.

The researchers offered TopCoder what they thought would be an impossible goal: to develop a predictive algorithm that was an order of magnitude better than either Arnaout's or the NIH's standard algorithm (known as BLAST), and that could scale up to the mounting data demands. To do this, they had to first reframe the problem, translating it so that it could be accessible to individuals not trained in computational biology.

In only two weeks, viable solutions came from 122 different individuals. Among these, 16 were more accurate -- and up to 1,000 times faster -- than BLAST. The research team has released the top five performing code submissions under an open source license.

"This is more than just a quick, in expensive answer," said Guinan. "It's uniting different approaches to a problem by taking from Harvard many disparate reservoirs of knowledge and bringing them together to formulate the question, analyze the data, and then put it back to use. This draws on our faculty in a very diverse way. By extending the numbers of people who look at our specific problem, we get solutions rapidly. We have a lot of biases about doing that, and we really shouldn't. In the end this allows researchers to turn their attention to basic science questions and not get caught up in details that they are less well suited to address."

"In a way, the immune system is really the dark matter of biology," said Arnaout. "We have all this sequence data, and there's no good way to figure out what it's doing. Not only did the best entries achieve truly superior performance, but also this kind of crowdsourcing has the potential to be a general solution for a whole class of problems in biology. No single university or institution has the bandwidth and resources to achieve this kind of result so quickly and efficiently."

Co-authors on the study included Po-Ru Loh (Massachusetts Institute of Technology), Lars Backstrom (TopCoder), Carliss Baldwin (HBS), Eric Lonstein (HBS), Mike Lydon (TopCoder) and Alan MacCormack (HBS).

This work was funded by Harvard Business School's Division of Research and Faculty Development, the NASA Tournament Lab at Harvard's Institute for Quantitative Social Science, and Harvard Catalyst.

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Story Source:

The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Harvard Medical School.

Note: Materials may be edited for content and length. For further information, please contact the source cited above.


Journal Reference:

  1. Karim R Lakhani, Kevin J Boudreau, Po-Ru Loh, Lars Backstrom, Carliss Baldwin, Eric Lonstein, Mike Lydon, Alan MacCormack, Ramy A Arnaout, Eva C Guinan. Prize-based contests can provide solutions to computational biology problems. Nature Biotechnology, 2013; 31 (2): 108 DOI: 10.1038/nbt.2495

Note: If no author is given, the source is cited instead.

Disclaimer: Views expressed in this article do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/top_environment/~3/E5-iUhTdFZY/130207141448.htm

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Select ski slope runs now available on Google Maps

Android Central

Google is always adding neat bits of information to its Maps database, and today its adding select ski resorts to that list. Users viewing certain ski slopes around the U.S. and Canada will now see ski runs, gondola routes and more right from the regular Google Maps interface. Different runs and routes show up as soon as you zoom in to a certain point, and show as both blue and green lines labeled with the route name. Gondola routes show as red dashed lines as well.

The list of mapped ski slopes is pretty limited right now unfortunately, with 38 different resorts listed in the post. But just like when Google started to map the insides of buildings, parks and other (relatively) small areas, these features will take some time to populate. We wouldn't expect that list to stay small for very long.

Source: Google Lat Long



Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/androidcentral/~3/RXhk4aF-aqQ/story01.htm

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Environmental factors determine whether immigrants are accepted by cooperatively breeding animals

Feb. 6, 2013 ? Cichlid fish are more likely to accept immigrants into their group when they are under threat from predators and need reinforcements, new research shows. The researcher suggests that there are parallels between cooperatively breeding fish's and humans' regulation of immigrants. The research was published February 6, 2013, in the journal Proceedings of the Royal Society B.

The Princess of Lake Tanganyika (Neolamprologus pulcher), a cichlid fish which is popular in home aquariums, are cooperatively breeding fish with a dominant breeding pair and several 'helper' fish that do not normally breed but instead assist with raising offspring. Helpers also play a crucial role in defending the group's territory against outsiders -- although helpers also compete with the breeders for resources and reproductive opportunities.

The researchers, led by Dr Markus Z?ttl of the University of Cambridge, wanted to find out how environmental pressures might influence the acceptance of new immigrants. Z?ttl, who conducted the research while at the University of Bern, said: "All animal societies are affected in one or another by immigration and when we seek to understand social organisation we need to understand which environmental factors influence processes like immigration."

A subdivided tank was used to carry out a series of tests in which different scenarios were observed. For the study, a breeding pair (which would be responsible for deciding whether a newcomer would be allowed to join the group) was placed in one compartment next to a compartment containing either a fish predator, an egg predator, a herbivore fish or no fish at all. An immigrant was placed in a third, adjoining compartment. The breeding pair was then exposed to the different fish in compartment two. The researchers then observed whether the type of fish they were exposed to would affect whether they accepted the immigrant fish from the third compartment.

The researchers found that breeders are less aggressive to immigrants and more likely to accept the unknown and unrelated fish as a member of their group when they are simultaneously exposed to predators. They concluded that cichlid fish are more likely to accept immigrants into their group when they are under threat from predators and can be used to increase their defences.

Dr Z?ttl added: "Our fish resemble human societies' view of immigration in two crucial aspects: The need for help in the territory takes precedence, and it seems to be a strategy of the territory holders to accept immigrants only when they need assistance with territory defence. This resembles human societies which organise immigration according to the demand in the society by encouraging skilled immigration when certain types of labour are in short supply."

The researchers also found that the fish appear to consider future threats. When egg predators were presented to a breeding pair who had not yet spawned they accepted new incomers. Their acceptance of reinforcements in the form of immigrant fish suggests that that the egg predator was viewed as a threat.

Dr Z?ttl concluded: "This behaviour suggests that breeders of this species might be able to anticipate a potential threat -- and it seems to resemble the future planning evident in birds and apes."

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Story Source:

The above story is reprinted from materials provided by University of Cambridge. The original story is licensed under a Creative Commons license.

Note: Materials may be edited for content and length. For further information, please contact the source cited above.


Note: If no author is given, the source is cited instead.

Disclaimer: Views expressed in this article do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/most_popular/~3/iJspHm8g26U/130206094716.htm

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Thursday, February 7, 2013

Mio Alpha Review: One Giant Leap For Heart Rate Monitors

Chest-strap heart rate monitors suck. I mean, yeah, they work okay, but they give you that tight-chest-"am-I-having-a-heart-attack?" feeling. That's why the Mio Alpha, a wristwatch that accurately measures your heart rate, is such a big deal. But that doesn't mean it's perfect. More »


Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/3DVhxkPcbcQ/mio-alpha-review-one-giant-leap-for-heart-rate-monitors

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MIRAGE 2013 : International Conference on Computer Vision ...

Call for Papers

Mirage 2013 is an international conference with focus on Computer Vision / Computer Graphics collaboration techniques. It is the 6th in a series of successful events having the objective of bringing together scientists and people interested in the interdisciplinary fields of vision and graphics, with special emphasis on the link between the converging disciplines. With recent developments in 3D sensor and camera technologies, mobile computing, and GPU processing, many novel applications emerge in areas like multimedia, augmented reality, media production, gaming, and medicine. Mirage 2013 will provide a forum for discussing innovative research and novel ideas in computer vision and graphics with plenary talks, single track oral sessions, and practical technology demonstrations.

Authors are encouraged to submit their recent research results, practice and experience reports, or novel applications relating to the topics of the Mirage 2013 conference.

Topics include, but are not limited to:

Model-based imaging and analysis
Image-based modeling and 3D reconstruction
Capture, processing, and display of 3D video
Image and video-based lighting and rendering
Computational photography
Time of flight, Kinect imaging
Model-based vision approaches
3D indexing and database retrieval
Object, body, and face tracking in image sequences
Model-based image and shape analysis
Model-based video compression techniques

With applications in the field of:

Multimedia applications, multimedia database classification
Virtual and augmented reality
Human / Computer interfaces
Media productions from and for films, broadcasts and games
Post-production, computer animation, virtual special effects
Realistic 3D simulation, virtual prototyping
Video-games and entertainment industry
Medical and biomedical applications

A printable version of the MIRAGE 2013 Call for Papers can be downloaded here Download Call for Papers.
Important Dates:

March 1st 2013 ? Paper submission deadline
March 5th until April 5th 2013 ? Paper review period
April 12th 2013 ? Paper notification of acceptance
May 7th 2013 ? Final paper due

Source: http://www.wikicfp.com/cfp/servlet/event.showcfp?eventid=28831©ownerid=47010

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Sally Jewell to Interior: U.S. overdue for action on public lands ...

Sally Jewell nominated as interior secretary

President Obama?s nomination? of Seattle-based Recreational Equipment CEO Sally Jewell as U.S. Interior Secretary gives his under performing administration an opportunity to correct its weak record on protecting public lands, and leave a legacy for Americans to enjoy in the future.

Jewell is an outdoor activist who has promoted use by the American public of America?s public lands, and protecting lands close to urban areas.

The new Interior Secretary is a longtime board member of the National Parks Conservation Association, and has been a major force behind Washington?s Mountains-to-Sound-Greenway ? the successful effort to keep the Interstate 90 corridor through Snoqualmie Pass from succumbing to sprawl and becoming a mountain slum.

Jewel was promoted for Interior Secretary after Obama?s 2008 victory.? ?She was offered the deputy?s job and didn?t take it,? said Gerry Grinstein, retired Delta Airlines chairman who pushed Jewell for the top spot four years ago.? ?It was a long soak period for this to get done.?

Gene Karpinski, head of League of Conservation Voters, hopes Jewell will ?use the Antiquities Act to create many more national monuments across the country? and leave the Obama administration with ?a second term legacy.?? The Obama administration needs to pursue ?a much more ambitious lands legacy,? Karpinski added.

One proposed monument ? with widespread local backing ? is to preserve 955 acres of key federally owned land in the San Juan Islands.? The designation has won support from Sens. Patty Murray and Maria Cantwell, D-Wash. but languished without action under outgoing Interior Secretary Ken Salazar.

U.S. Rep. Rick Larsen, D-Wash., voiced hope that under Jewell the administration will get its rear in gear.

?Sally has walked our trails, paddled in the Sound and climbed our mountains,? Larsen said.? ?I have no doubt that she will be an outstanding advocate for the Pacific Northwest.? I look forward to working with Sally on issues important to our economy and environment, starting with designation of a San Juan Islands National Monument.?

Grinstein is hoping that the Interior Department under Jewell will go national with the Mountains-to-Sound concept, as a way of providing urban areas with relief from a ?sprawl society.?

?We worked together as (University of Washington) Regents:? Sally has a wonderful mind and she is not hesitant to speak her mind . . . I think Mountains-to-Sound is the kind of thing she has a mind for doing.? Expanding that concept to the rest of the country is important.?

?We were able to do that here because the environmental ethic is stronger in the Northwest than in the rest of America.? But there are areas all over the country where we can do similar things . . . She (Jewell) is a collaborator.? If governors and governments give her a chance to deal with them, she?ll do fine.?

The Interior Secretary is America?s top manager of public lands, overseeing 368 units of the national park system as well as vast tracts of land under auspices of the U.S. Bureau of Land Management.? Jewell?s job will range from overseeing protection of America?s ?crown jewels? of nature and history, to overseeing oil and gas leasing in Arctic waters of Alaska.

Sen. Patty Murray, D-Wash., stressed Jewell?s work for preservation in her Northwest back yard, saying:? ?I have worked closely with Sally on public land policy and conservation initiatives in Washington state, including efforts to expand the Alpine Lakes Wilderness, work on Wild Olympics legislation, the designation of a San Juans National Monument, and the decade-long effort to create a Wild Sky Wilderness.

?At REI, she helped make the economic case for public land protections and hosted public meetings and helped educate Washington on my wilderness protection legislation.?

But, mindful that Big Oil and Big Coal have allies on the Senate committee that will confirm Jewell, President Obama stressed that she is an engineer who worked in the oil fields of Oklahoma and Colorado, and her record as a businesswoman.? ?Sally has helped turn a stalling outdoor retailer into one of America?s most successful and environmentally conscious companies,? Obama said in announcing Jewell?s nomination.

Past Interior Secretaries in Democratic administrations have distinguished themselves, and left a major imprint in the West.? The Obama administration has, however, created on a handful of tiny monuments in the West, such as preserving Cesar Chavez?s house and the original California headquarters of the United Farmworkers Union,and land around California?s Fort Ord.

But major conservation actions have been lacking.? Interior Secretary Bruce Babbitt, under President Clinton, made happen the 1.7 million acre Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monument in the canyonlands of southern Utah, the Hanford Reach National Monument on the Columbia River in eastern Washington, and the Upp0er Missouri Breaks National Monument in Montana ? where Lewis & Clark traveled more than two centuries ago.

Interior Secretary Stewart Udall, under Presidents Kennedy and Johnson, pressed successfully for creation of the North Cascades National Park in this state, and Canyonlands National Park in Utah.

Interior Secretary Cecil Andrus, under the Carter Administration, championed the granddaddy of preservation actions in recent American history, the 103-million-acre Alaska Lands Act that more than doubled the size of America?s national parks system.

?In the Obama era, land conservation is again falling behind,? ex-Secretary Babbitt said in a National Press Club speech earlier this week.? He noted that 6 million acres have been opened to oil and gas leasing, while just one significant land preservation bill has passed Congress in the past four years.

Grinstein noted, however, that Obama has faced unrelenting opposition on issues including energy and the environment.?? ?Yeah, I do think they need one (a public lands legacy),? he said.? ?Remember, however, Obama has been fighting on so many fronts.?

Source: http://blog.seattlepi.com/seattlepolitics/2013/02/06/sally-jewell-to-interior-u-s-overdue-for-action-on-public-lands/

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Whale Hits Canoe, Startles Couple in Hawaii

Source: http://www.thehollywoodgossip.com/2013/02/whale-hits-canoe-startles-couple-in-hawaii/

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